Results 301 to 310 of about 164,031 (354)
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The Lancet, 1981
Indirect methods of recording blood pressure suffer from all the known methodological inaccuracies of the Riva Rocci-Korotkoff technique, are slow-moving and are difficult to use for repeated measurements. Nevertheless, the causal indirect blood pressure has powerful predictive value for cardiovascular disease in populations.
T, Pickering, G, Harshfield, H, Kleinert
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Indirect methods of recording blood pressure suffer from all the known methodological inaccuracies of the Riva Rocci-Korotkoff technique, are slow-moving and are difficult to use for repeated measurements. Nevertheless, the causal indirect blood pressure has powerful predictive value for cardiovascular disease in populations.
T, Pickering, G, Harshfield, H, Kleinert
+6 more sources
Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring
Age and Ageing, 1992This paper reviews the evidence that, in patients with hypertension, end-organ damage correlates more closely with blood pressure values obtained by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring than with those obtained by conventional sphygmomanometry. However, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is not suitable for routine use in the clinical setting because
G, Mancia +4 more
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 1993During the past decade, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has risen rapidly as a diagnostic technique used in clinical research trials and, more recently, in clinical practice. Blood pressure monitors have become smaller, technologically improved, and quiet during recordings--all features that have increased patient compliance. During the past year,
W B, White, G A, Mansoor
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Ambulatory blood pressure measurements
Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2001Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) has emerged as a valuable clinical and research tool in the assessment of pediatric hypertension. Large databases of 24-hour blood pressure monitorings in healthy children are under development for establishing normal reference values analogous to the Task Force data for casual blood pressure. In the clinical
J M, Sorof, R J, Portman
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring
Journal of Hypertension, 1996PREDICTIVE VALUE OF 24-H AMBULATORY BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING: Average 24-h blood pressure values are more closely related to the target-organ damage of hypertension than are clinic blood pressure readings. Preliminary evidence from longitudinal studies suggests that ambulatory blood pressure is also superior to isolated clinic readings in the ...
Mancia, G +6 more
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Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring
Southern Medical Journal, 2003Noninvasive, 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) has evolved over the past 25 years from a novel research tool of limited clinical use into an important and useful modality for stratifying cardiovascular risk and guiding therapeutic decisions.
Michael E, Ernst, George R, Bergus
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring
Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1994Non-invasive measurement of blood pressure in ambulatory humans began in the 1960s. Ambulatory devices have been modified over the years and are now pocket-sized, with almost noiseless pumps. Their accuracy must be validated by independent laboratories using a standardised protocol.
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring
Current Hypertension Reports, 2000Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is becoming widely accepted as a clinically useful tool for assessing cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients, although it is not generally recognized for reimbursement in the United States. There are now six major prospective studies, all of which have shown that ABPM gives a better prediction of risk ...
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Normality of ambulatory blood pressure
Blood Pressure Monitoring, 1999An operational threshold for making clinical decision on the basis of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring must be defined. This requires that the relationship between the ambulatory pressure and the incidence of cardiovascular complications be clarified beyond present understanding.
T, Kuznetsova +2 more
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring
Medical Journal of Australia, 2002End-organ damage associated with hypertension is more closely related to ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) than clinic or casual blood pressure measurements. ABP measurements give better prediction of clinical outcome than clinic or casual blood pressure measurements.
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